According to www.scmp.com, Pakistan, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt have formed a new regional coordination framework amid the US-Israel war on Iran — a development with immediate implications for global supply chain resilience, particularly across the Middle East, South Asia, and Central Asia corridors.
A New Regional Coordination Framework
The grouping comprises NATO member Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt — the Arab world’s largest military power, and nuclear-armed Pakistan. According to the report, this coalition is actively pressing for a negotiated settlement to the Iran war. Islamabad plays a dual role: mediator between Tehran and Washington, and trusted representative for its regional partners — “above all Riyadh.”
Drivers: Fear of US Abandonment
The source states that “fear of US abandonment is pushing states to build more diplomatic mass, even if they cannot yet build an integrated military bloc.” This sentiment reflects broader recalibrations among U.S. partners following perceived strategic unpredictability — a trend observed in recent years across multiple regions, including the Red Sea crisis and shifting security assurances in the Gulf.
“A mixed system” was emerging, he said – one in which multilateral formats “increasingly handle the grand strategic questions” while the hard security balance would still be dominated by Washington and whatever survives of Tehran’s proxy network. — Andreas Krieg, associate professor of defence studies at King’s College London who previously advised Qatar’s armed forces on behalf of the UK defence ministry
Supply Chain Implications for Practitioners
For global supply chain professionals, this realignment signals heightened complexity in risk mapping. The four-nation framework spans critical maritime chokepoints — including the Straits of Hormuz (Saudi Arabia, Egypt), the Suez Canal (Egypt), and key overland routes linking Central Asia to the Gulf (Turkey, Pakistan). Disruptions linked to diplomatic escalation, sanctions enforcement, or port access restrictions now carry layered exposure: not only from conflict zones but from coordinated policy shifts among these four capitals.
Historically, Egypt and Saudi Arabia have jointly managed Suez Canal and Red Sea corridor stability; Turkey has served as a multimodal transit hub between Europe and Asia; and Pakistan’s Gwadar Port — part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor — adds strategic depth to South Asian logistics. With these actors now coordinating diplomacy and security posture, supply chain teams must treat their joint statements and bilateral agreements as de facto early-warning indicators — especially regarding fuel availability, customs clearance protocols, and maritime insurance premiums.
This development follows similar moves by other major players: the EU’s recent emphasis on geopolitical risk in its CSDDD due diligence requirements, and Maersk’s 2025 announcement of diversified routing through the Black Sea and Gulf of Aden amid escalating Red Sea volatility. Unlike those responses, however, the Turkey-Saudi-Egypt-Pakistan framework represents a self-organized, non-Western multilateral initiative — one that may accelerate parallel standard-setting in cross-border documentation, cargo inspection reciprocity, and emergency port access agreements.
Source: South China Morning Post
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










